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Why Camille Dungy can’t separate her garden from Black history

Camille Dungy’s latest book, “Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden,” began as a study of the plants, animals, and insects in her garden.

Then the nation erupted.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

When writing about her garden, author Camille Dungy couldn’t ignore how her ancestral roots as a Black woman were deeply tied to the soil.

“I was doing the bulk of my writing in 2020,” Ms. Dungy recalls, “when my daughter was home and I was responsible for overseeing her remote schooling. … [and] an awakening or reckoning with social injustice and disparities occurred.”

“It became impossible for me not to weave all these events together,” she says.

On the one hand, “Soil” offers useful gardening tips, such as how deep to plant alliums. But along the way, readers learn about history, Black culture, and parenting, too. 

Ms. Dungy acknowledges the toil of America’s Black citizens and honors their unquenchable thirst to “grow their own beauty” in what was a very parched land. Scattered throughout “Soil” are time-tested words of wisdom to support the flourishing of plants and to inspire those willing to dig into their own roots to uncover the resilience in their ancestry.

“I can’t understand who I am right now and who my daughter can be,” Ms. Dungy says, “if I can’t fully understand who my family has been and what experiences they … passed along to me.” 

In her book “Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden,” Camille Dungy creates a plot of pages enriched by their diverse mixture of nature, nurture, history, and memoir. On the one hand, “Soil” offers useful gardening tips, such as how deep to plant crocuses and alliums. But along the way, readers discover that tumbleweed was transported from Europe, black-eyed peas arrived aboard slave ships, and both gardens and children need patience and grace.

The recipient of the 2021 Academy of American Poets Fellowship and a 2019 Guggenheim Fellowship, Ms. Dungy unearths American history, one that recognizes the toil of America’s Black citizens and honors their unquenchable thirst to “grow their own beauty” in what was a very parched land. Scattered throughout “Soil” are time-tested words of wisdom intended to support the flourishing of native and imported plants as well as inspire those willing to dig into their ancestral roots to uncover the resilience from whence they come.

Ms. Dungy, a University Distinguished Professor at Colorado State University, recently spoke with the Monitor. The interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

When writing about her garden, author Camille Dungy couldn’t ignore how her ancestral roots as a Black woman were deeply tied to the soil.

How did this idea get started, the telling of American history by sharing stories about gardening, the lives of African Americans – including your own ancestors – and your experiences as a mother?

“Soil” began as a simple environmental study of the plants, animals, and insects that were in my garden. I was working to create a space of welcome, … a space in my yard for native plants and animals, and to encourage pollinators to come. But I was doing the bulk of my writing in 2020, when my daughter was home and I was responsible for overseeing her remote schooling. … The nation was erupting. An awakening or reckoning with social injustice and disparities occurred, … and there was a catastrophic wildfire just miles from my home. It became impossible for me not to weave all these events together. I had to pay attention to all that was happening around me.

© BEOWULF SHEEHAN/SIMON & SCHUSTER

CAMILLE T. DUNGY

Writing about soil, planting, and growing became a metaphor, not only for all that was growing and happening in the world, but also for your desire to unearth family history. What has digging into your ancestral soil revealed?

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